Beyond Freedom And Dignity: Difference between revisions

From Cibernética Americana
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<table align=right><tr><td align=justify>
<table align=right><tr><td><html><img src=/images/BFDf.jpg width=333></html></td><td><html><img src=/images/BFDb.jpg width=315></html></td></tr></table>
 
</td><td><html><img src=/images/BFDf.jpg width=333></html></td><td><html><img src=/images/BFDb.jpg width=315></html></td></tr></table>
 


== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==

Revision as of 01:04, 29 May 2007

Synopsis

I intend the following to be a simple chapter by chapter paraphrastic synopsis of the title work to go in the existing English article as a section (without this leading text).

When figures as widely spread on the political spectrum as Ayn Rand and Noam Chomsky condemn a work something must be up. I think this and Walden Two are Skinners most important works. I think it's hard to put this work in context without having read Walden Two.

It's easy to understand why Skinner stirs people up with these works since they are diameterically opposite to lip service that is almost universally given to 'democracy'. Skinners vision of society is not democratic and in this work he explains why. On a superficial note I will comment that I think this is in fact consistent with what people really want out of society, i.e actual well being not the illusion of freedom and dignity as they have shown time and again, albeit more often than not with disastrous results.

A Technology of Behavior

Freedom

Dignity

Punishment

Alternatives to Punishment

Values

The Evolution of Culture

The Design of Culture

What is Man?